Daft Punk Discovery Rar 32082

Ok as most of us know, some god on the internet has uploaded two torrents 'Daft Punk Complete Discography Vol. 1' and 'Daft Punk Complete Discography Vol. 2' . Both together literally containing everything our dafty has ever touched. The entire discography is 4.82 gb's, and the quality is very good. most include the album artwork and caps of the album's back etc. but the album artworks seem to be a bit sloppy and the mp3 tags are organized a bit bad, like all the songs are in caps etc. I spent hours and hours making album artworks for all of the 'Alive's' in different locations based off the original but gave them each their own style considering each performance has its own style. I fixed/edited/remade/made some for EP's and singles. and as soon as I am done with vol. 2 I plan to re upload the torrent but with MUCH better organization and hours spent on editing mp3 tags for perfection when imported to your itunes. when i say perfection I mean perfection. I will post some of the artworks I have made and a track listing of the entire discography. And I have an important question if anyone could help me. you see there is a 'BBC Radio 1 Daft Punk's Essential Mix' which is a two hour recording of Daft Punk's live essential mix on the radio and its awesome . some of you may not know but when a track is really long it takes up ipod battery alot quicker than normal song length tracks would. so I want to split the essential mix into parts and make a whole album like what daft punk did with 'Alive 2007'. The only problem is i can't find a track listing for it anywhere so I don't know what the songs used in the essential mix are called . so if anyone could help me with that it would be greatly appreciated.
Daft Punk Complete Discography Vol. 1 (3.20 GB)
1992 - Darlin' (demo)
1994 - The New Wave EP
1996 - Da Funk (CD Single)
1996 - Revolution 909
1997 - Around The World (CD Single)
1997 - Around the World EP
1997 - Burnin'
1997 - Live at Borealis Festival, Montpellier
1997 - Live at Rex Club Paris - 15.05.97
1999 - Homework
2000 - Discovery (beta version)
2000 - One More Time (CDSingle)
2001 - Aerodynamic (ep)
2001 - Alive 1997
2001 - Digital Love
2001 - Discovery
2003 - Face To Face (single)
2003 - Something About Us (Love Theme From Interstella 5555)
2004 - Daft Club
2005 - Human after all
2005 - Live in NYC
2006 - Alive Summer 2006
2006 - Human After All Remixes (Limited Edition)
2006 - Musique Vol 1
2006 - Prime Time Of Your Life (vinyl single)
2006 - The Prime Time of Your Life
2007 - Louis Vuitton SpringSummer 08 Womenswear Mix
2007 - A collection of Daft Punk Samples
2007 - Alive 2007 (Special Edition)
2007 - Alive at Bercy (2007-06-14)
2007 - BBC Radio One Sesion (Essential Mix Classic 1997)
2007 - Live at Vegoose 2007
2007 - Live In Belfort
2007 - Live Mexico City
2007 - Live Red Rock Festival (Open Air d’Esch Sur Alzette)
2007 - One More Time (The House Moguls Remix) [white label]
2008 - Around the world 2008 (around001)
2008 - Harder better faster stronger 2008 (alive club mixes)
2008 - Harder better faster stronger (maxi)
2009 - Around the world 2009 (bootleg Vinyl)
Daft Punk Complete Discography Vol. 2 (1.62 Gb)
2001 - Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger
2005 - Human After All (Promo)
2005 - Human After All (Single)
2005 - Remixes One (DPK001)
2005 - Robot Rock (12')
2005 - Robot Rock (Single)
2005 - Technologic (12')
2005 - Technologic (Single)
2006 - Daft Punk Live @ Coachella
2006 - Live @ Buenos Aires Urban Festival
2006 - Robot Rock (Adjuster Remake) (DPRR001)
2006 - Robot Rock (Shiloh Remix) (SHI 001)
2007 - Daft Punk vs. Chaka Khan - Ain't No Television (PROPER002)
2007 - Harder Better Faster Stronger (DEADPUNK01)
2007 - Kanye West Feat. Daft Punk - Stronger (Promo CDS)
2007 - Live Mixes 2007 (DPX1)
2007 - One More Time (Daft Unreleased Dub) (DADUB001A)
2008 - Around the World (WORLD101)
2008 - One More Time Alive (Bootleg-Vinyl-2008-XXL)
Colaborations:
1998 - Music Sounds Better With You
2000 - Together
2002 - So Much Love To Give
OST
2003 - Irreversible
2007 - Electroma
Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo
1997 - Santa Claus Holiday On Ice
1998 - Intergalactik Disko
1998 - Troobadoor Mirage
1998 - White Winds Santa Claus (Remix)
1999 - Boogie Shell Coco Girlz Mosquito Coral Twist
1999 - Hysteria
2001 - Gator Chérie D'Amoure
2002 - Doggystyle Rhumba
2002 - If You Give Me The Love I Want Playground Loaded
2002 - Nymphae Song Rhumba
2002 - Soul Bells Palm Beat Tropicall
2002 - Wrath Of Zeus Wet Indiez (Play Paul Remix)
Thomas Bangalter
1995 - Trax on da Rocks Vol. 1
1996 - Spinal Scratch
1998 - Trax on da Rocks Vol. 2
2003 - Outrage
and more bootlegs and remixes
(I have a bit More than this original Uploader so mine will also include every Daft Punk DJ Hero Remix and The Grammys Performance. Both in high quality. and some various Daft Punk Remixes.)
Also I have not yet started organizing the mp3 tags on the second torrent or making artworks for it. that will be my project this week and next week with any free time I have.
  1. Daft Punk Discovery
  2. Daft Punk Homework Rar
  3. Daft Punk Albums
  4. Daft Punk Discovery Zip

If you still have trouble downloading Daft Punk-Discovery.zipx hosted on mediafire.com 40.16 MB, Daft Punk - Discovery [2001] -entyal.rar hosted on mediafire.com 111.96 MB, Daft Punk - Discovery (2001) [FLAC].rar hosted on mega.co.nz 400.12 MB, or any other file, post it in comments below and our support team or a community member will help you! Homework is the debut studio album by the French electronic music duo Daft Punk, released on 20 January 1997 by Virgin Records and Soma Quality Recordings. The duo produced the tracks without plans to release an album. Discovery full album. Daft Punk = one of the best music groups ever. Discovery by Daft Punk = one of the best albums ever.

Homework
Studio album by
Released20 January 1997
Recorded1993–1996
StudioDaft House (Paris)
Genre
Length73:53
Label
Producer
Daft Punk chronology
Homework
(1997)
Discovery
(2001)
Singles from Homework
  1. 'Da Funk'
    Released: December 1996
  2. 'Around the World'
    Released: 17 March 1997
  3. 'Burnin'
    Released: 15 September 1997
  4. 'Revolution 909'
    Released: 16 February 1998

Homework is the debut studio album by the French electronic music duo Daft Punk, released on 20 January 1997 by Virgin Records and Soma Quality Recordings. The duo produced the tracks without plans to release an album. After working on projects that were intended to be separate singles over five months, they considered the material good enough for an album.

Homework's success brought worldwide attention to French house music. Homework charted in 14 different countries, peaking at number 3 on the French Albums Chart, number 150 on the United States Billboard 200 and at number 8 on the UK Albums Chart. By February 2001, the album had sold more than two million copies worldwide and received several gold and platinum certifications. Overall, Homework received positive critical response. The album features singles that had significant impact in French house and global dance music scenes, including the U.S. BillboardHot Dance/Club Play number-one singles 'Da Funk' and 'Around the World', the latter of which reached number 61 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Background and recording[edit]

In 1993, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo presented a demo of their electronic music to DJ Stuart Macmillan at a rave at EuroDisney.[1] The contents of the cassette were released on the single 'The New Wave' on 11 April 1994, by Soma Quality Recordings, a Scottish techno and house label co-founded in 1991 by MacMillan's band Slam.[2] Daft Punk returned to the studio in May 1995 to record 'Da Funk',[3] which was released later that year alongside 'Rollin' & Scratchin' under the Soma label.[4]

We've got much more control than money. You can't get everything. We live in a society where money is what people want, so they can't get the control. We chose. Control is freedom. People say we're control freaks, but control is controlling your destiny without controlling other people.
—Thomas Bangalter, in regards to the duo's creative control and freedom[5]

The increasing popularity of Daft Punk's singles led to a bidding war among record labels, resulting in the duo's signing to Virgin Records in 1996.[6][7] Their departure was noted by Richard Brown of Soma, who affirmed that 'we were obviously sad to lose them to Virgin but they had the chance to go big, which they wanted, and it's not very often that a band has that chance after two singles. We're happy for them.'[1] Virgin re-released 'Da Funk' with the B-side 'Musique' in 1996, a year before releasing Homework. Bangalter later stated that the B-side 'was never intended to be on the album, and in fact, 'Da Funk' as a single has sold more units than Homework, so more people own it anyways [sic] than they would if it had been on the album. It is basically used to make the single a double-feature.'[8] The album was mixed and recorded in Daft Punk's studio, Daft House in Paris. It was mastered by Nilesh Patel at the London studio The Exchange.[9]

Bangalter stated that 'to be free, we had to be in control. To be in control, we had to finance what we were doing ourselves. The main idea was to be free.'[10] Daft Punk discussed their method with Spike Jonze, director of the 'Da Funk' music video. He noted that 'they were doing everything based on how they wanted to do it. As opposed to, 'oh we got signed to this record company, we gotta use their plan.' They wanted to make sure they never had to do anything that would make them feel bummed on making music.'[11] Although Virgin Records holds exclusive distribution rights over Daft Punk's material, the duo still owns their master recordings through their Daft Trax label.[6][12]

Composition[edit]

Daft Punk produced the tracks included in Homework without a plan to release an album. Bangalter stated, 'It was supposed to be just a load of singles. But we did so many tracks over a period of five months that we realized that we had a good album.'[13] The duo set the order of the tracks to cover the four sides of a two-disc vinyl LP.[8] De Homem-Christo remarked, 'There was no intended theme because all the tracks were recorded before we arranged the sequence of the album. The idea was to make the songs better by arranging them the way we did; to make it more even as an album.'[8] The name Homework, Bangalter explained, relates to 'the fact that we made the record at home, very cheaply, very quickly, and spontaneously, trying to do cool stuff'.[14]

'Alive', first single released from Homework, is the final version recorded of 'The New Wave',[15] which was the first song made by Daft Punk.[1]
LP version of 'Around the World', third single released from the album. The song carries influences of Gershon Kingsley's hit 'Popcorn'[1] while playing over 'a post-disco boogie bassline', which serves as the base for a 'single, naggingly insistent hook'.[16]
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Daft Punk Discovery

'Daftendirekt' is an excerpt of a live performance recorded in Ghent, Belgium;[9] it served as the introduction to Daft Punk's live shows and was used to begin the album.[8] The performance took place at the first I Love Techno, an event co-produced by Fuse and On the Rox on 10 November 1995.[17]Janet Jackson sampled 'Daftendirekt' on her song 'So Much Betta', which was included in her tenth studio album, Discipline, in 2008.[18]Homework's following track, 'WDPK 83.7 FM', is a tribute to FM radio in the US.[10] The next song, 'Revolution 909' is a reflection on the French government's stance on dance music.[8][19]

'Revolution 909' is followed by 'Da Funk', which carries elements of funk and acid music.[1] According to Andrew Asch of the Boca Raton News, the song's composition 'relies on a bouncy funk guitar to communicate its message of dumb fun'.[20] Bangalter expressed that 'Da Funk's theme involved the introduction of a simple, unusual element that becomes acceptable and moving over time.[21] Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine complimented the song as 'unrelenting',[22] and Bob Gajarsky of Westnet called it 'a beautiful meeting of Chic (circa 'Good Times', sans vocals) and the 90s form of electronica'.[23] The song appeared on the soundtrack for the 1997 film The Saint and was placed at number 18 on Pitchfork's 'Top 200 Tracks of the 1990s' list.[24] 'Phœnix' combines elements of gospel music and house music.[25] The duo considered 'Fresh' to be breezy and light with a comical structure.[26] Ian Mathers of Stylus Magazine criticized the song, stating that it 'doesn't feel like the beach just because of the lapping waves heard in the background'.[27]

The single 'Around the World' carries influences of Gershon Kingsley's hit 'Popcorn'.[1] Its music video was directed by the Academy Award-winning French filmmaker Michel Gondry, who compared the track's bassline to that of 'Good Times' by Chic.[28] Chris Power of BBC Music named it 'one of the decade's catchiest singles'. He stated that it was 'a perfect example of Daft Punk's sound at its most accessible: a post-disco boogie bassline, a minimalist sprinkling of synthetic keyboard melody and a single, naggingly insistent hook'.[16] Ian Mathers of Stylus Magazine commented that 'there is no way you'd want to have a Homework without 'Around The World'.'[27] The track 'Teachers' is a riff on the Parris Mitchell song 'Ghetto Shout Out!!', released in 1995 on Dance Mania.[29] The track is a tribute to several of Daft Punk's house music influences, including future collaborators Romanthony, DJ Sneak and Todd Edwards.[30] The song 'Oh Yeah' features DJ Deelat and DJ Crabbe. 'Indo Silver Club' features a sample of 'Hot Shot' by Karen Young.[9] Prior to its inclusion on Homework, 'Indo Silver Club' was released as a single on the Soma Quality Recordings label in two parts.[31] The single lacked an artist credit in the packaging[31] and was thought to have been created by the nonexistent producers Indo Silver Club.[32] The final track, 'Funk Ad', is a reversed clip of 'Da Funk'.[8]

Singles[edit]

Homework features singles that had significant impact in the French house[33] and global dance music scenes.[6] The first single from the album, 'Alive', was included as a B-side on the single 'The New Wave', which was released in April 1994. The album's second single was 'Da Funk'; it was initially released in 1995 by Soma and was re-released by Virgin Records in 1996. It became the duo's first number-one single on the BillboardHot Dance/Club Play chart.[34] The song reached number seven on British[35] and French charts.[36] The third single, 'Around the World', was a critical and commercial success, becoming the second number-one single on the Billboard Hot Dance/Club Play chart,[34] as well as reaching number 11 in Australia,[37] number five in the United Kingdom[38] and number 61 on the Billboard Hot 100.[39] In October 2011, NME placed 'Around the World' at number 21 on its list of '150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years'.[40] The album's fourth single was 'Burnin'; it was released in September 1997 and peaked at number 30 in the UK.[38] The final single from Homework was 'Revolution 909'. It was released in February 1998 and reached number 47 in the UK[38] and number 12 on the Billboard Hot Dance/Club Play chart.[39]

In 1999, the duo released a video collection featuring music videos of tracks and singles from the album under the name of D.A.F.T.: A Story About Dogs, Androids, Firemen and Tomatoes. Although its title derives from the appearances of dogs ('Da Funk' and 'Fresh'), androids ('Around the World'), firemen ('Burnin'), and tomatoes ('Revolution 909') in the videos, a cohesive plot does not connect its episodes.[41]

Critical reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[42]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[43]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[44]
The Guardian[45]
Muzik10/10[46]
NME7/10[47]
Pitchfork9.2/10[48]
Q[49]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[50]
Select4/5[51]

Homework's success brought worldwide attention to French progressive house music,[52] and drew attention to French house music.[33] According to The Village Voice, the album revived house music and departed from the Euro dance formula.[53] In the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, critic Alex Rayner stated that Homework tied the established club styles to the 'burgeoning eclecticism' of big beat. He contended that it served as a proof that 'there was more to dance music than pills and keyboard presets.'[54]Clash described Homework as an entry point of accessibility for a 'burgeoning movement on the cusp of splitting the mainstream seam'.[55] In 2009, Brian Linder of IGN described Homework as the duo's third-best album. He catalogued as a 'groundbreaking achievement' the way they used their unique skills to craft the house, techno, acid and punk music styles into the record.[56] Hua Hsu of eMusic agreed, applauding Homework for how it captured a 'feeling of discovery and exploration' as a result of 'years of careful study of the finest house, techno, electro and hip-hop records'.[57] David Browne, writing in Entertainment Weekly, stated that the duo knew how to use 'their playful, hip-hopping ambient techno' to craft the album. He named Homework the 'ideal disco for androids'.[44] Sean Cooper of AllMusic called the album 'an almost certain classic' and 'essential'.[42]

Chris Power of BBC Music compared Homework's 'less-is-more' approach to compression's use as 'a sonic tribute' to the FMradio stations that 'fed Daft Punk's youthful obsessions'.[16] Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine wrote that 'while a few tracks are more daft than deft,' more recent groundbreakers like The Avalanches could never exist without 'Da Funk'.[22] Ian Mathers of Stylus Magazine noted that 'there's a core of unimpeachably classic work on Homework, hidden among the merely good, and when you've got such a classic debut hidden in the outlines of the epic slouch of their debut, it's hard not to get frustrated.'[27]Rolling Stone awarded the album three stars out of five, commenting that 'the duo's essential, career-defining insight is that the problem with disco the first time around was not that it was stupid but that it was not stupid enough.'[50]Rolling Stone ranked Homework at the top on their list of 'The 30 Greatest EDM Albums of All Time' while affirming that Daft Punk's debut 'is pure synapse-tweaking brilliance'.[58] According to Scott Woods of The Village Voice, 'Daft Punk [tore] the lid off the [creative] sewer' with the release of Homework.[53] In a retrospective review for Pitchfork, Larry Fitzmaurice awarded it 9.2 out of 10. He stated that 'Homework remains singular within Daft Punk’s catalog, the record also set the stage for the duo’s career to this very day—a massively successful and still-going ascent to pop iconography, built on the magic trick-esque ability to twist the shapes of dance music’s past to resemble something seemingly futuristic.' [48] By contrast, Robert Christgau of The Village Voice cited 'Da Funk' as a 'choice cut',[59] indicating 'a good song on an album that isn't worth your time or money'.[60] Darren Gawle from Drop-D Magazine also gave a negative review, stating that 'Homework is the work of a couple of DJs who sound amateurish at best.'[61]

Commercial performance[edit]

Daft Punk wanted the majority of pressings to be on vinyl, so only 50,000 albums were initially printed in Vinyl format. After its release, overwhelming sales of Homework caused distributors to accelerate production to satisfy demand. The album was distributed in 35 countries worldwide,[6] peaking at number 150 on the Billboard 200.[62]Homework first charted on the Australian Albums Chart on 27 April 1997; it remained there for eight weeks and peaked at number 37.[63] In France, the album reached number three and stayed on the chart for 82 weeks. In 1999, it reached Gold status in France for selling more than 100,000 copies.[64] On 11 July 2001, the album was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), indicating sales of 500,000 copies in the US.[65][66] By October 1997, the album had sold 220,000 copies worldwide,[67] although Billboard reported that, according to Virgin Records, two million copies had been sold by February 2001.[68] By September 2007, 605,000 copies had been sold in the United States.[69]

Track listing[edit]

All music composed by Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo.

Punk
No.TitleLength
1.'Daftendirekt'2:44
2.'WDPK 83.7 FM'0:28
3.'Revolution 909'5:26
4.'Da Funk'5:28
5.'Phœnix'4:55
6.'Fresh'4:03
7.'Around the World'7:04
8.'Rollin' & Scratchin'7:26
9.'Teachers'2:52
10.'High Fidelity'6:00
11.'Rock'n Roll'7:32
12.'Oh Yeah'2:00
13.'Burnin'6:53
14.'Indo Silver Club'4:32
15.'Alive'5:15
16.'Funk Ad'0:51
Total length:75:53

Charts[edit]

Chart (1997)Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[63]37
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[70]34
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[71]7
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[72]9
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[73]15
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[74]25
French Albums (SNEP)[75]3
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[76]34
German Albums (Media Control)[77]48
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[78]8
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[79]40
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[80]16
UK Albums (OCC)[81]8
US Billboard 200[82]150

Certifications[edit]

RegionCertificationCertified units/sales
Belgium (BEA)[83]Platinum50,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[84]2× Platinum200,000^
France (SNEP)[64]Platinum534,400 [85]*
New Zealand (RMNZ)[86]Platinum15,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[88]Platinum345,009[87]
United States (RIAA)[89]Gold674,000[90]

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdefCollin, Matthew (August 1997). 'Do You Think You Can Hide From Stardom?'. Mixmag. Retrieved 6 March 2007.
  2. ^The New Wave (liner notes). Daft Punk. Soma Quality Recordings. 5 024856 620149.
  3. ^'Daft Punk History & Facts'Archived 6 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine . The Daft Punk Site. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  4. ^James (2003), p. 273.
  5. ^Moayeri, Lily (9 June 2007). 'Punk As They Wanna Be'. Yahoo. Archived from the original on 9 June 2007. Retrieved 11 January 2012.
  6. ^ abcdRFI Music – Biography – Daft PunkArchived 13 August 2012 at the Wayback MachineRadio France Internationale. Retrieved 3 March 2007.
  7. ^Woholeski, Peter (May 2001). 'One More Time: Four Years After Its Filter Filled Splashdown, Daft Punk Retirns With Discovery – Complete with House Beats, Disco Sweeps and, Yes, Plenty of Vocoders'Archived 22 August 2001 at the Wayback Machine . DJ Times. Retrieved 5 May 2007.
  8. ^ abcdefWarner, Jennifer. 'Interview with Daft Punk'Archived 10 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine . p. 3. DMA. About.com. Retrieved 30 March 2007.
  9. ^ abcHomework (liner notes). Daft Punk. Virgin Records, a division of EMI Group. 42609. 1997.
  10. ^ abDi Perna, Alan (April 2001). 'We Are The Robots', Pulse!. pp. 65–69.
  11. ^Jonze, Spike (2003). The Work of Director Spike Jonze companion book. Palm Pictures. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  12. ^James (2003), p. 267.
  13. ^James (2003), p. 269.
  14. ^Nickson, Chris (June 1997). 'Daft Punk: Parlez-vous da funk?'. CMJ New Music Monthly (46). CMJ Network. p. 10. ISSN1074-6978. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  15. ^The New Wave (lines notes). Daft Punk. Soma Quality Recordings. 5 024856 620149.
  16. ^ abcPower, Chris (5 January 2010). 'Review of Daft Punk – Homework'. BBC Music. BBC. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  17. ^History - I Love TechnoArchived 13 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine (lineup 1995). ilovetechno.be. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  18. ^Discipline (Booklet). Janet Jackson. Island Records, a division of The Island Def Jam Music Group. 2008.
  19. ^Warner, Jennifer. 'Interview with Daft Punk'Archived 8 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine . p. 2. DMA. About.com. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  20. ^Asch, Andrew (18 December 1997). 'Daft Punk smashes charts with simplicity'. Boca Raton News. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  21. ^Daft Punk audio commentary for 'Da Funk' music video, The Work of Director Spike Jonze (2003).
  22. ^ abCinquemani, Sal (2 November 2002). 'Daft Punk: Homework'. Slant Magazine. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  23. ^Gajarsky, Bob (28 April 1997). 'Daft Punk, Homework'Archived 10 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine . Westnet. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  24. ^Ryan Dombal (3 September 2009). 'Staff Lists: The Top 200 Tracks of the 1990s: 20-01'. Pitchfork. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  25. ^
    • Warner, Jennifer. 'Interview with Daft Punk'Archived 10 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine . p. 3. DMA. About.com. Retrieved 30 March 2007.
    • Dolan, Jon; Matos, Michaelangelo (2 August 2012). 'The 30 Greatest EDM Albums of All Time'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  26. ^D.A.F.T.: A Story About Dogs, Androids, Firemen and Tomatoes. Virgin Records. 1999.
  27. ^ abcMathers, Ian (9 May 2005). 'Daft Punk: Homework – Playing God'. Stylus Magazine. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  28. ^Gondry, Michel (2003). The Work of Director Michel Gondry companion book. Palm Pictures. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  29. ^Galil, Leor (23 May 2013). 'The Return of Dance Mania Records'. Chicago Reader.
  30. ^Gill, Chris (1 May 2001). ROBOPOP. Remix Magazine. Archived from the original on 11 February 2012. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  31. ^ abIndo Silver Club (liner notes). Daft Punk. Soma Quality Recordings. SOMA 035.
  32. ^Silcott, Mireille (3 April 1997). 'Personality punks'. Montreal Mirror. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
  33. ^ abJames (2003). p. 292.
  34. ^ ab'Daft Punk Album & Song Chart History'. Billboard. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  35. ^'Archive Chart'UK Singles Chart. Official Charts Company. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
  36. ^'Lescharts.com – Daft Punk – Da Funk' (in French). Les classement single. Hung Medien. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
  37. ^'Discography Daft Punk'. Australian-Charts.com. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  38. ^ abc'DAFT PUNK'. Official Charts Company. Retrieved 30 April 2012
  39. ^ ab'Daft Punk Album & Song Chart History'. Billboard. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  40. ^Tim Chester. 150 Best Tracks Of The Past 15 Years – #21 – Daft Punk – Around the WorldNME. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  41. ^Deming, Mark. 'Daft Punk: D.A.F.T. – A Story About Dogs, Androids, Firemen, and Tomatoes (2000)'. Allmovie. Retrieved 24 December 2012.
  42. ^ abCooper, Sean. 'Homework – Daft Punk'. AllMusic. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  43. ^Larkin, Colin (2011). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th concise ed.). Omnibus Press. ISBN0-85712-595-8.
  44. ^ abBrowne, David (23 May 1997). 'Homework'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  45. ^Bennun, David (24 January 1997). 'Hip to the trip'. The Guardian.
  46. ^'Daft Punk: Homework (Virgin)'. Muzik (21): 58. February 1997.
  47. ^Dalton, Stephen (18 January 1997). 'Daft Punk – Homework'. NME. Archived from the original on 11 October 2000. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  48. ^ abFitzmaurice, Larry (2 December 2018). 'Daft Punk: Homework'. Pitchfork. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
  49. ^'Daft Punk: Homework'. Q (127): 120. April 1997.
  50. ^ abWolk, Douglas (2004). 'Daft Punk'. In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. p. 207. ISBN0-7432-0169-8.
  51. ^Lawrence, Eddy (February 1997). 'Daft Punk: Homework'. Select (80): 82.
  52. ^Carr, Eric (17 November 2003). 'Staff Lists: Top 100 Albums of the 1990s'. Pitchfork. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  53. ^ abWoods, Scott (5 October 1999). 'Underground Disco?'. The Village Voice. New York. Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  54. ^Rayner, Alex (2006). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. p. 812. New York, NY: Universe Publishing. 2006. ISBN0-7893-1371-5. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  55. ^Younis, Reef (15 February 2012). 'Classic Albums: Daft Punk – Homework'. Clash. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  56. ^Linder, Brian (1 May 2012). 'Daft Punk: Worst to Best'. IGN. Retrieved 23 October 2009.
  57. ^Hsu, Hua (8 May 2011). 'Daft Punk, Homework'. eMusic. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
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Bibliography[edit]

  • James, Martin. French Connections: From Discotheque to Discovery. London: Sanctuary Publishing, 2003. (ISBN1-86074-449-4)

Daft Punk Homework Rar

External links[edit]

Daft Punk Albums

  • Homework at Discogs

Daft Punk Discovery Zip

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